Timing of evidence disclosure raises ire of judge in 'Freedom Convoy' trial
Laura Osman, The Canadian Press
Published Friday, September 8, 2023
OTTAWA - Hope that the trial of two “Freedom Convoy” organizers would last only four weeks may be dashed after the defence raised complaints about receiving heaps of new evidence three days after the trial began.
Justice Heather Perkins-McVey told the court there is a potential risk for the trial to go “off the rails,” if it continues to evolve in the way it has been going. She used the day of court time on Friday to try to “crystallize the evidence” for the remainder of the trial.
Before that, there was a sense of tension in the courtroom as Crown and defence lawyers sparred over the timing of the delivery of binders full of text messages.
The justice called a short recess to step away from the bench to “settle” herself after telling the lawyers she was “very unhappy” about the late-stage disclosure.
“This should have been done well before the trial,” she chided before leaving the courtroom.
Perkins-McVey is now working with court staff to find more dates as the prospect the trial will run long has grown. Initially 16 days were set aside for the trial, with three extra days added to the court's calendar as a precaution.
But as the first week of hearings drew to a close Friday, it was clear the timelines were on the brink of being blown.
The text messages are from the cellphone belonging to Chris Barber, who is co-accused with Tamara Lich of mischief, counselling others to commit mischief and obstructing police.
The charges relate to the role the two played in organizing the convoy that blocked streets in downtown Ottawa for three weeks in the winter of 2022.
Social media and other digital communications are key to the Crown's case, which alleges Barber and Lich exerted control and influence over the unlawful protest, and that they counselled demonstrators to remain in Ottawa after police ordered them out.
Barber's lawyer Diane Magas said she asked the Crown to whittle down tens of thousands of her client's text messages to just the ones expected to be entered into evidence.
Crown lawyer Tim Radcliffe said that request came just before the trial started and was fulfilled this week.
Magas said based on what the Crown had told her she expected roughly 22 of Barber's chats to be at issue. Instead, she said she was given 135 chats to wade through on Thursday.
She told the judge she didn't know how she could be expected to digest the evidence and make sure her client has a fair trial.
The chats are also relevant to Lich's case because the Crown hopes to prove that the two organizers conspired so closely together that evidence against one should apply to both of them.
The tempers of lawyers on both sides of the courtroom flared during the debate over the texts
Similar conflicts have played out over the disclosure and admissibility of video and social media evidence in the first week of the trial. Though four police officers have taken the stand so far, only one has finished testifying.
For the others, their evidence has been interrupted by complaints by the defence lawyers that they don't have all the information they need to craft their defence, or about the admissibility of the evidence.
On Friday afternoon, the lawyers also argued about whether the “Freedom Convoy 2022” Facebook page should be admitted.
The Crown says the page is evidence that helps prove Lich and Barber conspired together, and that evidence against one should apply to both.
Lich's lawyer, Eric Granger, said the Crown is trying to put 212 pages of Facebook evidence to the court, and it's unclear who authored many of the posts.
“It involves a number of posts not by Mr. Barber, not by Ms. Lich,” Granger said outside the courthouse Thursday.
This is not the trial of the Freedom Convoy, he said, “this is the trial of these two particular individuals.”
Radcliffe told the court Friday that he only intends to use the posts signed “Tamara,” which the defence admit were written by Lich, as evidence.
He also plans to use other posts on the page as circumstantial evidence related to fundraising and legal advice to protesters. The Facebook page also demonstrates that videos were “cross-posted” on different platforms, including TikTok, he said.
While most of the day was devoted to legal arguments about the admissibility of evidence, the court was briefly introduced to several videos from Lich's TikTok account.
The court also watched a video posted to the TikTok account PapaWolf65 on Feb. 10, which featured Lich and Barber on the streets of Ottawa.
In the video, Lich encouraged a supporter to spread the word about the convoy, and characterized it as “Canada Day on steroids.”
Perkins-McVey said the nuances of the legal arguments may be boring to most of the 20 or so members of the public who attended the courtroom Friday, but said “this is what trials are made of.”
“This a trial that is based on the rule of law, the rule of evidence, and these nuances are key to the Crown and to the defence,” she said.
The judge vowed before the trial began that she would keep the proceedings on the rails, and told the court Friday that is still her intention.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 8, 2023.
Judy Trinh
CTV National News, Ottawa Correspondent
Updated Sept. 8, 2023
As the criminal trial of 'Freedom Convoy' leaders Tamara Lich and Chris Barber continues, the Crown has released never-before-seen video evidence showing what the occupation of the nation's capital was like from the police perspective.
The video evidence, prepared by Crown witness and Ottawa Police Cst. Craig Barlow, features a mixture of footage from police body cams and surveillance drones. The nearly 12-minute-long video shows the progression of the protest through three weeks and just how outnumbered officers were as demonstrators entrenched in the capital. The footage also reveals the tension from the frontlines as police in riot gear cleared downtown Ottawa.
Ottawa Police Inspector Russell Lucas testified that officers were often “swarmed” and that convoy participants became more volatile as the demonstration continued.
The footage also shows overhead footage of the logistics centre on Conventry Road, which is about five kilometres east of Parliament Hill. The lot between a hotel and baseball stadium was used as a staging centre to supply fuel and food for the protesters.
This is the biggest file of the more than 100 exhibits entered as evidence in the trial. Of these, 50 are videos, including social media clips from Tik Tok and Facebook. Some of the videos were posted by Lich and Barber.
The Crown alleges that Lich and Barber conspired together to encourage thousands of followers to come to Ottawa to participate in an occupation that gridlocked the city.
Central to the case are three words: “Hold the line.” The Crown says the infamous phrase isn’t a rallying cry, but a call to break laws.
“The Charter does not give any person the legal right to unlawfully trample the rights of others. Not only did protesters hold the lines for weeks as directed by Mr. Barber and Ms. Lich – they crossed the line,” said assistant Crown attorney Tim Radcliffe in his opening statement.
The defence maintains that the two convoy leaders planned a “peaceful protest” and criticized the Crown’s characterization of it as an "occupation."
Lich and Barber were arrested on February 17, 2022, three days after the Emergencies Act was invoked. The act provided authorities with broad power to curtail civil rights to maintain public order. The day after the arrests of the convoy leaders, police began a massive operation to dismantle the protest.
More than 2,000 police officers from the RCMP, OPP and 13 municipal police services deployed officers to dismantle the demonstration. The policing bill for the three week protest cost $55 million. Ottawa Police laid more than 500 charges during the “Freedom Convoy.”
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